BBC documentary proves Israeli
army murdered Rachel Corrie

by Christopher Bollyn27 November 2003

The BBC has released a remarkable film about the killing of
three international peace activists by the Israeli army in the occupied
Gaza Strip. Documentary evidence provided in the film strongly suggests
that the American Rachel Corrie - and two British activists - were murdered.

In spring 2002, within a period of seven weeks, one British and one American
peace activist were killed by the Israeli army in Rafah, a Palestinian
town at the southern end of the occupied Gaza Strip. A second Briton was
shot in the head leaving him brain-dead. In two of the cases the Israeli
army is being blamed for murder; the third is considered "attempted murder."

An Israeli military bulldozer crushed the 23-year-old American peace
activist Rachel Corrie, who was the first to die on March 16, as she tried
to prevent it from demolishing a Palestinian doctor's home.

British photographer Tom Hurndall, 22, was left brain dead after being
shot in the head by an Israeli soldier on April 11. British cameraman James
Miller, 34, was shot by an Israeli sniper as he left a house with two other
journalists on May 2.

A recently released 50-minute "hard-hitting" program produced by the
British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) investigated the three killings and provides
crucial video evidence. "That's murder," an Israeli soldier said after
viewing footage from the film, When Killing is Easy.

When Killing is Easy was shown 4 times to a worldwide audience
on the commercial BBC World television network on November 22 and 23. Some
cable television viewers in the United States would have been able to view
the program.

The three international observers died, or nearly died, at the hands
of the Israeli military between the middle of March and the first week
of May. Hurndall was shot in the head as he took a Palestinian toddler,
who had frozen under Israeli fire, into his arms. Today, Hurndall is brain-dead
and is kept alive on life-support equipment.

Tom's father, Anthony, is a lawyer in the City of London. After six
weeks of investigation, Hurndall has come to the conclusion that the shooting
of his son by Israeli forces is "a case of attempted murder. If Tom dies,
and that is a likelihood, then it will be murder," he said.

Jocelyn Hurndall wrote to The Guardian after an Israeli government check
for about $12,000, sent to the Hurndall family to pay for "a fraction of
the expenses incurred," bounced. When the check finally arrived after five
months of negotiations with the Hurndall family, the Israeli government
check was not "honored" by the Bank of Israel, Hurndall wrote. "Insufficient
funds' was the reason given.

According to evidence provided in Sweeney's film, the IDF report on
the shooting of Hurndall is completely wrong about where he was, what he
was wearing, and what he was doing when an Israeli soldier shot him in
the head.

"It is a mind-numbing task to understand the morality and to use the
logic of the Israeli government," Hurndall wrote. "What hope do Palestinians
have when such profound disregard and disrespect is shown to humanity,
collectively and individually?"

"Making our film, When Killing is Easy, has been the most harrowing
ordeal of my professional life," Sweeney wrote. "But it is vital that it
is evidential - and that is really tough when the Israeli government and
the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) have refused to speak to us."

Rachel Corrie, the first of the three to die, was using her body to
defend the home of Dr. Samir Nasser Allah from an American-made bulldozer
used by the Israeli army to demolish the homes of Palestinians. Corrie
was a member of the International Solidarity Movement (ISM). ISM members
stand between the Israeli bulldozers and the homes that the IDF wants to
flatten.

Israeli bulldozers have razed thousands of Palestinian homes in the
occupied Gaza Strip and the West Bank. The bulldozers are primarily made
by the Illinois-based Caterpillar company.

Tom Dale, an ISM eyewitness, had a clear view of the incident:

"He [the driver] knew absolutely she was there. The bulldozer
waited for a few seconds over her body and it then reversed, leaving its
scoop down so that if she had been under the bulldozer, it would have crushed
her a second time. Only later when it was much more clear of her body did
it raise its scoop."

"MY BACK IS BROKEN"

"My
back is broken," Rachel told Alice Coy, a fellow ISM activist who was with
her.

An Israeli pathologist, Dr. Yehudah Hiss, noted that Rachel appeared
to have been run over by the bulldozer, Sweeney wrote. Hiss found the cause
of death to be "pressure to the chest." Her shoulder blades had been crushed;
her spine was broken in five places and six ribs broken. Her face was apparently
slashed by the bulldozer blade.

The IDF produced a report that says, "Corrie was not run over by an
engineering vehicle." It added, "for good measure" Sweeney says, that Corrie
was "hidden from view of the vehicle's operator."

The footage seen in the BBC film proves these statements to be false.
The family of Rachel Corrie believes the IDF report to "be a blatant fabrication,"
Sweeney wrote.

The British cameraman James Miller was shot dead by an Israeli sniper
as he left a house in Rafah with two other journalists on the night of
May 2. An Associated Press TV News (APTN) cameraman filmed the entire scene.

One of the three journalists held a white flag; Miller was shining a
light on the flag and a third journalist held up her British passport.
There was no shooting and the area was quiet as the audio track of the
film clearly proves.

The three had walked about 60 feet toward an Israeli armed personnel
carrier to request safe passage to leave the area when the first shot was
fired. "We are British journalists," Saira Shah cried out into the darkness.

"Then comes the second shot, which killed James," Sweeney wrote. "He
was shot in the front of his neck. The bullet was Israeli issue, fired,
according to a forensic expert, from less than 200 meters [600 feet] away."

The IDF maintains that Miller was shot during crossfire, although no
shooting is heard on the APTN tape apart from the two shots fired from
the Israeli military vehicle.

When the APTN tape was shown to an Israeli soldier, who is shown in
the film, he said the television team did not look like Islamic terrorists
and concluded: "That's murder."